Contagious Policies: An Analysis of Spatial Interactions Among Countries' Capital Account Policies
Countries' capital account policies might be contagious in the sense that domestic policies are driven by other countries' policies. A model of strategic interactions is developed to show that countries' best response to policy changes elsewhere consists in imitating this policy. Using a spatial econometric model, the hypothesis of policy interactions is tested in a large panel data set. The evidence shows that capital account policies are contemporaneously correlated across countries. Concerning fundamentals, the move to a fixed exchange rate regime and an increase in real world interest rates are correlated with the imposition of capital account restrictions.
C23 - Models with Panel Data ; F21 - International Investment; Long-Term Capital Movements ; F3 - International Finance ; F42 - International Policy Coordination and Transmission